Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon (e book reader for pc .TXT) đź“•
The governess lifted her head from its stooping attitude, and staredwonderingly at her employer, shaking back a shower of curls. They werethe most wonderful curls in the world--soft and feathery, alwaysfloating away from her face, and making a pale halo round her head whenthe sunlight shone through them.
"What do you mean, my dear Mrs. Dawson?" she asked, dipping hercamel's-hair brush into the wet aquamarine upon the palette, and poisingit carefully before putting in the delicate streak of purple which wasto brighten the horizon in her pupil's sketch.
"Why, I mean, my dear, that it only rests with yourself to become LadyAudley, and the mistress of Audley Court."
Lucy Graham dropped the brush upon the picture, and flushed scarlet tothe roots of her fair hair; and then grew pale again, far paler thanMrs. Dawson had ever seen her before.
"My dear, don't agitate yourself," said the surgeon's wife, soothingly;"you know that nobody asks you to marry Sir
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winning words, my lady’s radiant glances and bewitching graces had done
their work of enchantment, and Sir Michael had grown to look upon his
daughter as a somewhat wilful and capricious young person who had
behaved with determined unkindness to the wife he loved.
Poor Alicia saw all this, and bore her burden as well as she could. It
seemed very hard to be a handsome, gray-eyed heiress, with dogs and
horses and servants at her command, and yet to be so much alone in the
world as to know of not one friendly ear into which she might pour her
sorrows.
“If Bob was good for anything I could have told him how unhappy I am,”
thought Miss Audley; “but I may just as well tell Caesar my troubles for
any consolation I should get from Cousin Robert.”
Sir Michael Audley obeyed his pretty nurse, and went to bed a little
after nine o’clock upon this bleak March evening. Perhaps the baronet’s
bedroom was about the pleasantest retreat that an invalid could have
chosen in such cold and cheerless weather. The dark-green velvet
curtains were drawn before the windows and about the ponderous bed. The
wood fire burned redly upon the broad hearth. The reading lamp was
lighted upon a delicious little table close to Sir Michael’s pillow, and
a heap of magazines and newspapers had been arranged by my lady’s own
fair hands for the pleasure of the invalid.
Lady Audley sat by the bedside for about ten minutes, talking to her
husband, talking very seriously, about this strange and awful
question—Robert Audley’s lunacy; but at the end of that time she rose
and bade her husband good-night.
She lowered the green silk shade before the reading lamp, adjusting it
carefully for the repose of the baronet’s eyes.
“I shall leave you, dear,” she said. “If you can sleep, so much the
better. If you wish to read, the books and papers are close to you. I
will leave the doors between the rooms open, and I shall hear your voice
if you call me.”
Lady Audley went through her dressing-room into the boudoir, where she
had sat with her husband since dinner.
Every evidence of womanly refinement was visible in the elegant chamber.
My lady’s piano was open, covered with scattered sheets of music and
exquisitely-bound collections of scenas and fantasias which no master
need have disdained to study. My lady’s easel stood near the window,
bearing witness to my lady’s artistic talent, in the shape of a
water-colored sketch of the Court and gardens. My lady’s fairy-like
embroideries of lace and muslin, rainbow-hued silks, and
delicately-tinted wools littered the luxurious apartment; while the
looking-glasses, cunningly placed at angles and opposite corners by an
artistic upholsterer, multiplied my lady’s image, and in that image
reflected the most beautiful object in the enchanted chamber.
Amid all this lamplight, gilding, color, wealth, and beauty, Lucy Audley
sat down on a low seat by the fire to think.
If Mr. Holman Hunt could have peeped into the pretty boudoir, I think
the picture would have been photographed upon his brain to be reproduced
by-and-by upon a bishop’s half-length for the glorification of the
pre-Raphaelite brotherhood. My lady in that half-recumbent attitude,
with her elbow resting on one knee, and her perfect chin supported by
her hand, the rich folds of drapery falling away in long undulating
lines from the exquisite outline of her figure, and the luminous,
rose-colored firelight enveloping her in a soft haze, only broken by the
golden glitter of her yellow hair—beautiful in herself, but made
bewilderingly beautiful by the gorgeous surroundings which adorn the
shrine of her loveliness. Drinking-cups of gold and ivory, chiseled by
Benvenuto Cellini; cabinets of buhl and porcelain, bearing the cipher of
Austrain Marie-Antoinette, amid devices of rosebuds and true-lovers’
knots, birds and butterflies, cupidons and shepherdesses, goddesses,
courtiers, cottagers, and milkmaids; statuettes of Parian marble and
biscuit china; gilded baskets of hothouse flowers; fantastical caskets
of Indian filigree-work; fragile teacups of turquoise china, adorned by
medallion miniatures of Louis the Great and Louis the Well-beloved,
Louise de la Valliere, Athenais de Montespan, and Marie Jeanne Gomard de
Vaubernier: cabinet pictures and gilded mirrors, shimmering satin and
diaphanous lace; all that gold can buy or art devise had been gathered
together for the beautification of this quiet chamber in which my lady
sat listening to the mourning of the shrill March wind, and the flapping
of the ivy leaves against the casements, and looking into the red chasms
in the burning coals.
I should be preaching a very stale sermon, and harping upon a very
familiar moral, if I were to seize this opportunity of declaiming
against art and beauty, because my lady was more wretched in this
elegant apartment than many a half-starved seamstress in her dreary
garret. She was wretched by reason of a wound which lay too deep for the
possibility of any solace from such plasters as wealth and luxury; but
her wretchedness was of an abnormal nature, and I can see no occasion
for seizing upon the fact of her misery as an argument in favor of
poverty and discomfort as opposed to opulence. The Benvenuto Cellini
carvings and the Sevres porcelain could not give her happiness, because
she had passed out of their region. She was no longer innocent; and the
pleasure we take in art and loveliness being an innocent pleasure, had
passed beyond her reach. Six or seven years before, she would have been
happy in the possession of this little Aladdin’s palace; but she had
wandered out of the circle of careless, pleasure seeking creatures, she
had strayed far away into a desolate labyrinth of guilt and treachery,
terror and crime, and all the treasures that had been collected for her
could have given her no pleasure but one, the pleasure of flinging them
into a heap beneath her feet and trampling upon them and destroying them
in her cruel despair.
There were some things that would have inspired her with an awful joy, a
horrible rejoicing. If Robert Audley, her pitiless enemy, her
unrelenting pursuer, had lain dead in the adjoining chamber, she would
have exulted over his bier.
What pleasures could have remained for Lucretia Borgia and Catharine de
Medici, when the dreadful boundary line between innocence and guilt was
passed, and the lost creatures stood upon the lonely outer side? Only
horrible, vengeful joys, and treacherous delights were left for these
miserable women. With what disdainful bitterness they must have watched
the frivolous vanities, the petty deceptions, the paltry sins of
ordinary offenders. Perhaps they took a horrible pride in the enormity
of their wickedness; in this “Divinity of Hell,” which made them
greatest among sinful creatures.
My lady, brooding by the fire in her lonely chamber, with her large,
clear blue eyes fixed upon the yawning gulfs of lurid crimson in the
burning coals, may have thought of many things very far away from the
terribly silent struggle in which she was engaged. She may have thought
of long-ago years of childish innocence, childish follies and
selfishness, of frivolous, feminine sins that had weighed very lightly
upon her conscience. Perhaps in that retrospective revery she recalled
that early time in which she had first looked in the glass and
discovered that she was beautiful; that fatal early time in which she
had first begun to look upon her loveliness as a right divine, a
boundless possession which was to be a set-off against all girlish
shortcomings, a counterbalance of every youthful sin. Did she remember
the day in which that fairy dower of beauty had first taught her to be
selfish and cruel, indifferent to the joys and sorrows of others,
cold-hearted and capricious, greedy of admiration, exacting and
tyrannical with that petty woman’s tyranny which is the worst of
despotism? Did she trace every sin of her life back to its true source?
and did she discover that poisoned fountain in her own exaggerated
estimate of the value of a pretty face? Surely, if her thoughts wandered
so far along the backward current of her life, she must have repented in
bitterness and despair of that first day in which the master-passions of
her life had become her rulers, and the three demons of Vanity,
Selfishness, and Ambition, had joined hands and said, “This woman is our
slave, let us see what she will become under our guidance.”
How small those first youthful errors seemed as my lady looked back upon
them in that long revery by the lonely hearth! What small vanities, what
petty cruelties! A triumph over a schoolfellow; a flirtation with the
lover of a friend; an assertion of the right divine invested in blue
eyes and shimmering golden-tinted hair. But how terribly that narrow
pathway had widened out into the broad highroad of sin, and how swift
the footsteps had become upon the now familiar way!
My lady twisted her fingers in her loose amber curls, and made as if she
would have torn them from her head. But even in that moment of mute
despair the unyielding dominion of beauty asserted itself, and she
released the poor tangled glitter of ringlets, leaving them to make a
halo round her head in the dim firelight.
“I was not wicked when I was young,” she thought, as she stared
gloomingly at the fire, “I was only thoughtless. I never did any
harm—at least, wilfully. Have I ever been really wicked, I wonder?”
she mused. “My worst wickednesses have bean the result of wild impulses,
and not of deeply-laid plots. I am not like the women I have read of,
who have lain night after night in the horrible darkness and stillness,
planning out treacherous deeds, and arranging every circumstance of an
appointed crime. I wonder whether they suffered—those women—whether
they ever suffered as—”
Her thoughts wandered away into a weary maze of confusion. Suddenly she
drew herself up with a proud, defiant gesture, and her eyes glittered
with a light that was not entirely reflected from the fire.
“You are mad, Mr. Robert Audley,” she said, “you are mad, and your
fancies are a madman’s fancies. I know what madness is. I know its signs
and tokens, and I say that you are mad.”
She put her hand to her head, as if thinking of something which confused
and bewildered her, and which she found it difficult to contemplate with
calmness.
“Dare I defy him?” she muttered. “Dare I? dare I? Will he stop, now that
he has once gone so far? Will he stop for fear of me? Will he stop for
fear of me, when the thought of what his uncle must suffer has not
stopped him? Will anything stop him—but death?”
She pronounced the last words in an awful whisper; and with her head
bent forward, her eyes dilated, and her lips still parted as they had
been parted in her utterance of that final word “death,” she sat blankly
staring at the fire.
“I can’t plot horrible things,” she muttered, presently; “my brain isn’t
strong enough, or I’m not wicked enough, or brave enough. If I met
Robert Audley in those lonely gardens, as I—”
The current of her thoughts was interrupted by a cautious knocking at
her door. She rose suddenly, startled by any sound in the stillness of
her room. She rose, and threw herself into a low chair near the fire.
She flung her beautiful head back upon the soft cushions, and took a
book from the table near her. Insignificant as this action was, it spoke
very plainly. It spoke very plainly of ever-recurring fears—of fatal
necessities for concealment—of a mind that in its silent agonies was
ever alive to the importance of outward effect. It
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